I have a new 5.5KW solar system on my roof and I just got PTO (permission to operate) last Friday. I figured this was a must have accessory to go with my I-meiv.

Installation went pretty smoothly, even with a two week delay from PG&E due to the wildfires in Paradise which was understandable. In fact, PG&E was very easy to work with. The only thing I had to do was relocate a rain downspout that was right over the new inverter mounted on the wall.

Now I have to look into which service plans are available to me.

2012 ES, Cool Metalic Silver, no quick charge, no fog lights and no navi but a cold weather package for when it gets 13 below, wait - it never gets that cold here."Silver Shadow"

ed5000, congratulations! Most people I know had to wait far longer for PG&E to come out and install their new meter, all the while the old meter was not recording any benefit from the active solar for the owner.

Need to study your existing consumption, factor in projections with your new solar system, and do the math to choose the least of the evils offered. Since you'll be Time Of Use (TOU) a lot depends on your particular daily schedule.

I have E-6, but it's not offered any more. My daytime peak rate is 45.7¢/kWh and my lowest rate is 17.9¢/kWh ... thank goodness, with my amortized 11kW solar I don't pay anything! They're wising up, reacting to the duck curve, and we'll all be screwed as they revise the rates...

Did you figure in electric cars as part of your amortization calculation? How many years? My own predicted was 17 years but in actuality it broke even in seven.

It'll be interesting what happens if PG&E is found liable if their downed power lines started all those fires...

Modern solar modules with microinverters are perfectly safe and easy to install, but the hurdles of permitting, interconnection agreements, and installing a production meter prevent most small scale solar from happening..... I'd seriously posit that a 120 VAC microinverter outputting through an extension cord into a normal 120V outlet poses far less hazard than any number of UL-listed appliances, and by design, cannot backfeed the grid during a power failure.

jray3 wrote:Modern solar modules with microinverters are perfectly safe and easy to install, but the hurdles of permitting, interconnection agreements, and installing a production meter prevent most small scale solar from happening..... I'd seriously posit that a 120 VAC microinverter outputting through an extension cord into a normal 120V outlet poses far less hazard than any number of UL-listed appliances, and by design, cannot backfeed the grid during a power failure.

I agree. I always thought these microinverters and panels should be sitting on a shelf at Lowes or HD with dryer plugs ready to plug in .

2012 ES, Cool Metalic Silver, no quick charge, no fog lights and no navi but a cold weather package for when it gets 13 below, wait - it never gets that cold here."Silver Shadow"

JoeS wrote:ed5000, congratulations! Most people I know had to wait far longer for PG&E to come out and install their new meter, all the while the old meter was not recording any benefit from the active solar for the owner.

Good luck on figuring out an advantageous rate structure -

All together it took about 2-1/2 months. The system was operable after a month and sat for 1-1/2 months. Not bad considering the wildfires and all.

Thanks for the links. I have a little homework to do...

2012 ES, Cool Metalic Silver, no quick charge, no fog lights and no navi but a cold weather package for when it gets 13 below, wait - it never gets that cold here."Silver Shadow"

47 cents/kWh is insane. No wonder Apple went all out on solar on their spaceship. Payback must be months instead of years.

One way around all the hassles of dealing with the utility would be to put battery-based solar in with the grid set up as a "backup generator". This would work great in less seasonal areas, as the house primarily runs on battery power (charged via solar) and only uses the grid when the batteries are low.

Dropbox maintenance in progress. If any of my links aren't working after November 17, please PM me and let me know which one isn't working.

47 cents/kWh is insane. No wonder Apple went all out on solar on their spaceship. Payback must be months instead of years.

One way around all the hassles of dealing with the utility would be to put battery-based solar in with the grid set up as a "backup generator". This would work great in less seasonal areas, as the house primarily runs on battery power (charged via solar) and only uses the grid when the batteries are low.

Thanks! With the ever increasing rates it kind of makes it a no brainer. With my I-miev my best guess is a payback of 5 years if nothing else changes.

Right now we're switching over to dual energy providers. The new one is East Bay Community Energy which will actually provide the power and the current, PG&E, which will provide transmission (which they're having trouble with due to wildfires) and billing (which they're good at).

Either way I figure I can't lose.

2012 ES, Cool Metalic Silver, no quick charge, no fog lights and no navi but a cold weather package for when it gets 13 below, wait - it never gets that cold here."Silver Shadow"